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Today’s post continues to explore the short story strategy and, in particular, how to set up a header line for each page.

As per my blog post of 23 April, you will have used the Scrivener short story template to set up your project for a short story destined to be a competition entry.

From my blog post of 29 April, you know how to control pagination within the Compile options, so that your entry is anonymous.

Then, in my blog post of 5 May, we looked at formatting and, in particular, double line spacing.

Today, in line with most competition rules, the focus is on setting up a header line to include the title of your story and the page number.

Setting up a header line

If you are working in Word, the header line is set up on the page, using View / Header and Footer. In Scrivener, it’s done through the File / Compile route.

Choose the Page Settings tab. It’s here that the metadata you could have set up for your project will be used to populate your header and/or footer. (For a reminder on metadata, read this blogpost.)

It’s interesting to go ahead and compile to see what the default setting produce.

This is not what’s required, so some tweaking is necessary. (Before you start tinkering with the Compile settings, you should set up a Custom Preset and call it something like ‘Short Story PDF’. If you’d like to know how, check out this blogpost.)

Changing the default settings

Assuming you’d like the title in the centre of each page, and the page number on the top right-hand corner, make these changes to the default settings.

Compile again and this is the result:

The title is now how we want it, but the page number is starting at 2 (because it’s counting the First Page Header page).

Controlling the page numbering

Select the First Pages tab and note the settings. There are no entries for the Header line, but there’s a tick against ‘Page numbers count first pages’.

If you’d like to see a demonstration of this Scrivener feature, or to ask me any questions about using Scrivener, register for my Simply Scrivener Special series of webinars.
The next series of 12 starts on 6 June 2017.
Free. 60 minutes Q&A with me.